This study assessed the efficacy and the safety of a dosing regimen that was revised from earlier studies for the investigational injectable atypical antipsychotic paliperidone palmitate (approved in the USA, August 2009) for adult patients with acutely exacerbated schizophrenia. The patients (N = 652) were randomly assigned (1:1:1:1) to paliperidone palmitate at 25, 100, or 150 mg eq. or placebo in this 13-week double-blind study. The patients received an injection of paliperidone palmitate at 150 mg eq. or placebo in the deltoid muscle on day 1 and the assigned fixed dose or placebo in the deltoid or gluteal [corrected] on day 8 and then once monthly (days 36 and 64). No oral supplementation was used. Target plasma levels were achieved by day 8 in all paliperidone palmitate groups. The mean change in Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale total score from baseline to end point improved significantly (P < or = 0.034) in all the paliperidone palmitate dose-groups versus placebo. Paliperidone palmitate treatment with this revised dosing regimen led to the achievement of rapid and consistent therapeutically effective plasma levels that were maintained by once-monthly dosing in either the deltoid or gluteal muscle. Common treatment-emergent adverse events (> or =2% of patients in any of the treatment groups) that occurred more frequently in the total paliperidone palmitate group versus the placebo group (with > or =1% difference) were injection-site pain (7.6% vs 3.7%), dizziness (2.5% vs 1.2%), sedation (2.3% vs 0.6%), pain in the extremity (1.6% vs 0.0%), and myalgia (1.0% vs 0.0%). The paliperidone palmitate treatment was efficacious and generally tolerated across the dose range (25, 100, or 150 mg eq.) in adult patients with acutely exacerbated schizophrenia.
Topotecan (Hycamtin), a semisynthetic water-soluble derivative of camptothecin, is a potent inhibitor of DNA topoisomerase I in vitro and has demonstrated encouraging antitumour activity in a wide variety of tumours, including ovarian cancer and small cell lung cancer. Now approved in the US, topotecan has completed single-agent phase I testing; phase II/III trials are ongoing. Under physiological conditions the lactone moiety of topotecan undergoes a rapid and reversible pH-dependent conversion to a carboxylated open-ring form, which lacks topoisomerase I inhibiting activity. At equilibrium at pH 7.4 the open-ring form predominates. Topotecan is stable in infusion fluids in the presence of tartaric acid (pH < 4.0), but is unstable in plasma, requiring immediate deproteinisation with cold methanol after blood sampling and storage of the extract at -30 degrees C to preserve the lactone form. Topotecan has been administered in phase I trials in several infusion schedules ranging from 30 minutes to 21 days. The plasma decay of topotecan concentrations usually fits a 2-compartment model. Rapid hydrolysis of topotecan lactone results in plasma carboxylate levels exceeding lactone levels as early as 45 minutes after the start of a 30-minute infusion. The peak plasma concentrations and the area under the plasma concentration-versus-time curves (AUC) show linear relationship with increasing dosages. No evidence of drug accumulation is seen with daily 30-minute infusions for 5 consecutive days. Topotecan lactone is widely distributed into the peripheral space, with a mean volume of distribution (Vd) at steady-state of 75 L/m2. The mean total body clearance of the lactone form is 30 L/h/m2, with a mean elimination half-life (t1/2 beta) of 3 hours; renal clearance accounts for approximately 40% of the administered dose with a large interindividual variability. The oral bioavailablity of topotecan is approximately 35%. The low bioavailability may be caused by hydrolysis of topotecan lactone in the gut, yielding substantial amounts of the open-ring form, which is poorly absorbed. Renal dysfunction may decrease topotecan plasma clearance. Creatinine clearance is significantly, but poorly, correlated with topotecan clearance. Hepatic impairment does not influence topotecan disposition. Indices of systemic exposure (steady-state concentrations and AUC) are correlated with the extent of myelotoxicity. Sigmoidal functions adequately describe the relationships between systemic exposure and the percentage decrease in neutrophils.
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